Donovan was a key figure in the creative explosion of the mid Sixties, fusing the folk boom with the experimentation and whimsy of the love generation. He was born in Glasgow, Scotland, and grew up in England. Early on, he mastered a sizable repertoire of folk and blues songs and had a hit at 18 with his first single, “Catch the Wind.” He soon thereafter made an artistic breakthrough with a unique sound and style that fused folk, blues, jazz, classical, Latin and Indian elements. Donovan’s fruitful union with producer Mickie Most and arranger John Cameron yielded much stylistically far-ranging work during the Sixties.

His biggest year was 1966, when “Sunshine Superman” and “Mellow Yellow” became major hits, reaching Number One and Two, respectively. The ambitious double album A Gift from a Flower to a Garden (1968) offered an album of songs for adults (Wear Your Love Like Heaven) and another for kids (For Little Ones), which were released separately in the United States.

Donovan continued to pursue his idiosyncratic, pacifist and itinerant outlook in the Seventies with such releases as Open Road, Cosmic Wheels and 7-Tease. Themes of love, compassion and understanding run throughout Donovan’s work, from his earliest recordings to albums of more contemporary vintage, such as 1996’s Sutras and 2004’s Beat Cafe.

Here, the Rock Hall suggests 10 Essential Donovan songs.

1. "Catch The Wind"

Recorded in 1964 and released the following year in both the United States and United Kingdom, "Catch The Wind" was Donovan's debut single. Drawing comparisons to Bob Dylan – who influenced Donovan, though Donovan more closely identified with the likes of Woody Guthrie – the young troubador wrote the lovelorn ballad about Linda Lawrence (then the significant other of the Rolling Stones' Brian Jones) who later became Donovan's wife. The lyrical sentiment reflected a legitimate naivety, as an 18-year-old Donovan sang wistful lines including When sundown pales the sky / I wanna hide a while / Behind your smile / And everywhere I'd look, your eyes I'd find. That unaffected, unadorned innocence was echoed in a dulcet folk melody matched to Donovan's acoustic guitar chording and harmonica riffs.

2. "Colours"

"Colours" was the follow-up single to "Catch The Wind," and later included on Donovan's second full-length, Fairytale, which was released in late 1965. The original recording (a different version with Donovan backed by a full band and produced by Mickie Most appeared on Epic's Donovan's Greatest Hits in 1969) featured Brian Locking of the Shadows on bass and took a similar tack to Donovan's first single, with lilting, acoustic-driven folk alongside the songwriter's poetic, romanticised reflections on the various shades that color his life.

3. "Sunshine Superman"

After a series of folk releases, "Sunshine Superman" – the title track of Donovan's third studio album – found Donovan plugging in and tuning out the detractors that had dismissed him as a Dylan wannabe. Released in 1966, the song blended elements of blues, classical, folk, jazz and rock and seamlessly married it all to an infectious melody that helped make Donovan among the biggest recording artists of the mid 60s, as "Sunshine Superman" peaked at Number One on the Billboard Hot 100 in America and Number Two on the British charts. The arrangement led with a jazzy bass groove, dotted with flashes of harpsichord, as Donovan's more familiar folk strum got a boost from guitarist Jimmy Page (of Yardbirds and Led Zeppelin fame), who supplied inventive blues licks throughout.

4. "Season Of The Witch"

Centered around two chords, 1966's "Season Of The Witch" took the psych-folk direction of "Sunshine Superman" to new heights. Whereas "Sunshine"'s narrative centered on grand romantic ambition (Superman or Green Lantern ain't got a-nothin' on me / I can make like a turtle and dive for your pearls in the sea, yeah!), "Season Of The Witch" invoked a mind-altering paranoia in lyrics such as: When I look over my shoulder / What do you think I see? / Some other cat / Looking over his shoulder at me / And he's strange, sure he's strange. Donovan departed from his usually lulling vocal cadence, instead varying between an almost spoken-word delivery to projecting in a gruff yell during the song's chorus. The trippy essence was spread over five coiling minutes.

5. "Mellow Yellow"

Peaking at Number Two on the Billboard Hot 100 in December 1966, "Mellow Yellow" – the title track of Donovan's fourth studio album – was a momentous follow-up to the success of "Sunshine Superman." Released at the dawn of the psychedelic revolution, the track's nonsensical, esoteric musings rode on a smooth jazz rhythm with minimal guitar voicings before a snare drum fill introduced a whirling interlude complete with horns, hollers and hand claps.

6. "Wear Your Love Like Heaven"

Donovan's ambitious 1967 studio effort was released as a double LP entitled A Gift From A Flower to a Garden in the UK, while its US release was divided between two records: Wear Your Love Like Heaven and For Little Ones. The warm atmospherics of the former – as well as the more bubbly, kid friendly aesthetic of the latter – were the result of Donovan's own production hand. The lyrics of "Wear Your Love Like Heaven" tread familiar ground – love, colors, nature, positivity – that combined with the upbeat, varied instrumentation evocatively capture the sentimental spirit of the era.

7. "Hurdy Gurdy Man"

Released in the United States in 1968, the title track of Donovan's sixth studio album bore a heavier sound than earlier material. Arranged by John Paul Jones, with percussion credited to John Bonham, and guitar work provided by Jimmy Page and Allan Holdsworth, the song's more muscular leanings felt natural. Donovan's trembling intonation drifted over a series of brooding rock passages that included washes of distorted guitar, declarative drum fills and sitar riffs. The song peaked at Number Five on the Billboard Hot 100.

8. "Barabajagal (Love Is Hot)"

Although the meaning of the title track to Donovan's 1969 album is debatable, its enunciation had an innate rhythmic quality that proved the guiding vibe for a recording featuring the Jeff Beck Group. With Donovan captaining the jam, and virtuoso guitarist Beck and his explosive rhythm section backing him, the song emerged as a fiery funk-groove that had yet to appear in Donovan's oeuvre to that point.

9. "Lord Of The Dance"

"Lord Of The Dance" appeared on Donovan's second double-album, HMS Donovan, a UK-only release in the summer of 1971. The prolific folk minstrel had returned to the studio following Barabajagal to record an album of children's songs, not unlike he had done with the aptly titled For Little Ones in 1967. "Lord Of The Dance" was an adaptation of the American Shaker song "Simple Gifts" by English musician Sydney Carter. Donovan's cover version had a markedly upbeat timbre, spirited along with the songwriter's prodigious finger picking – a style he had borrowed from the likes of another Stateside influence: the Carter Family.

10. "Poorman's Sunshine"

Although "Poorman's Sunshine" originated during the recording of Barabajagal, it was given new life on Donovan's 2004 album Beat Cafe. True to the implication of an album named Beat Cafe, "Poorman's Sunshine" opened with a fluid upright bass riff and cymbal splashes as Donovan cooly sang "I'm out of the darkness and into the light," evoking the darkened environs of a jazz nightclub. Adding speedy drumstick-brush fills and dashes of lively organ to the mix alongside Donovan's rhythmic vamping completed the effect and gave the song a steely swing.